Habits of Inequality

Lorne Tepperman and Nina Gheihman

Timely. The rise of the global Occupy movement demonstrates that now more than ever people are interested in social inequality issues and their associated social problems.

Broad approach. The authors draw fascinating connections across large-scale social problems, such as racism, gender discrimination, and economic inequality.

Persuasive theory. Offers a thought-provoking argument for the pervasiveness of inequality around the world.

Accessibly written. A lively, highly readable narrative will appeal to the general reader without a sociology background.

Canadian content. Social inequality in Canada is compared on an international scale, using both hard and soft measures.

Expert author. Lorne Tepperman has authored over a dozen books on sociology, including The Sense of Sociability, hailed as a "sweeping, ambitious book" (Literary Review of Canada).

Entertaining examples. From the royal wedding to the popular documentary Seven Up!, engaging examples remind us that we are regularly exposed to social inequalities in our everyday lives.

Habits of Inequality

Lorne Tepperman and Nina Gheihman

Description

British social reformer Robert Owen once declared that "man is the creature of circumstances." A century and a half later, his famous words still ring true. While many adopt a fatalist approach, believing that their lot in life is inevitable, in fact a number of highly complex social factors determine the outcome of our socioeconomic status and integration into society. It may seem unfair, but the conditions into which we are born largely determine the various courses that our lives take.

In their highly readable overview authors Lorne Tepperman and Nina Gheihman look to the social inequalities that arise from such circumstances-including those of class, gender, race, ethnicity, age, and sexual orientation. In doing so, they uncover the startling
observation that in any given society these various manifestations of inequality show similar patterns, revealing a cultural predisposition (or "habit") that favours and promotes inequality.

Associated with these social inequalities are a number of hidden costs, ranging from unnecessarily high rates of physical and mental illness, addiction, violence, and crime. With inequality on the rise in Canada, the increase of these social problems is an unsettling reality. In order to address these major inequalities-and to resolve their associated social problems-we must first overcome this underlying habit that connects them all. If that is our societal goal, and the authors argue it should be, we must be prepared to change the way we think about politics, culture, society, and
ourselves.

Habits of Inequality

Lorne Tepperman and Nina Gheihman

Table of Contents

Preface: Heaven on Earth Introduction: The Inequality Myth Part I. Habits of Inequality 1. Exploitation 2. Domination 3. Racialization 4. Exclusion 5. Victimization 6. Colonization Part II. The Power of Life and Death 7. Sickness and Stigmatization 8. Crime and Punishment 9. War and Destruction Part III. Making Society Better 10. Imperfect Equality Notes Bibliography Index

Habits of Inequality

Lorne Tepperman and Nina Gheihman

Author Information

Lorne Tepperman, Professor of Sociology, University of Toronto,Nina Gheihman, M.A. candidate, Sociology, University of Toronto

Lorne Tepperman is the author of The Sense of Sociability: How People Overcome the Forces Pulling Them Apart, Problem Gambling in Canada, and Betting Their Lives: The Close Relations of Problem Gamblers, all published by Oxford University Press. A professor at the University of Toronto, he has taught courses on sociology for over forty years and has published over a dozen textbooks in the field.

Nina Gheihman is a graduate student of sociology at the University of Toronto, currently studying how individuals' interactions with the cultural milieu around them contribute to the broadly pattered social inequalities that
characterize our society.